Kabir Saheb uses vivid and paradoxical imagery to describe the inherent nonsense and contradictions in human life, comparing our world to a city where vultures guard meat shops and frogs keep snakes as pets. Acharya Prashant explains that these metaphors represent how humans appoint the ego and the mind to guard their peace, which is as futile as a vulture guarding meat. He points out that we often forcefully bring things like prestige, property, and relationships into our lives, believing they will serve us, when in reality, they act like snakes that slowly consume us. This self-destructive behavior stems from a deep-seated belief in one's own cleverness and a refusal to trust a higher guide or the guru.